STICKS AND STONES
by Susan Meissner
reviewed by
They’re going to find a body at the Prairie Bluff construction site. He deserved what he got, but it wasn’t supposed to happen. It was an accident.
When the body is uncovered, Rachael and Detective Will Pendleton discover that the fifteen-year old victim, Randall Bucket, had been buried twenty-five years before. Is the letter writer and the killer the same person? Why would someone speak up now? And why are they telling Rachael?
~ back cover of Sticks and Stones
Rachael has received a letter from someone who believes her compassionate enough not to judge what he/she is claiming to be an accidental death that has been hidden for twenty-five years. The truth is now coming out whether the letter writer likes it or not, and Rachel hopes to discover the truth before the police do. Somehow, in an eerie way, Rachel knows the person who is writing the letters is innocent. Now if she can only convince the cops…
If you enjoy a book that’s dedicated to exploring contemporary issues, this book might be the one for you. Sticks and Stones revolves around those ridiculed and bullied as children and the horrific results it has on them at the time, as well as later, as adults. There is one chapter in particular toward the beginning that describes children abusing other children and parents and schools failing them by not controlling them. It was quite eye opening.
Being an escapist reader myself, I still found this book enjoyable for its suspense and a few quirky characters that were written particularly well. Rachel’s artsy, eccentric husband, Trace, and his equally maverick buddies, Brick and Fig, were a blast to read. From spiky hair colored teal at the tips to yak and jicama for dinner, these guys kept me chuckling.
Meissner does an excellent job of weaving backstory into the plot without overwhelming the reader. I didn’t even realize I was reading book two in the Rachel Flynn Mysteries until well toward the end when I read the back cover.
So who killed the neighborhood bully, fifteen-year-old Ronald “Bucky” Buckett? Which one of his five child-victims would hate him enough to do it? Or did they work together…?
Was it “murder and mayhem” or “desperation and utter misfortune” that took Bucky’s life? Rachel’s about to find out…

1 comment:
you got me interested...i think i will have to pick this book up and get to know this author...karen gardner (1)
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